
Profits Before Patients.
The gatekeepers to modern healthcare, these companies decide who gets help and who gets buried in bills. They pose as safety nets, but their business model is stacked to protect shareholders — not patients. Denials, fine print, network games, and premiums that climb no matter how healthy you are.
Back in the ’90s, Hillary Clinton led a so-called reform that handed even more power to insurance companies — shielding their profits under the banner of “managed competition.” The plan failed, but the message stuck: Let the private sector run the show. Since then, prices have exploded, coverage has shrunk, and the system got more complex, not more caring. Obamacare only doubled down on the same playbook.
For SphstRDnck, the whole system feels rigged — built by suits in Washington and boardrooms, far from the dirt roads where people bleed, break, and need real care. Until we rip out the rot and build something that puts people first, insurance stays a necessary evil — not a partner in healing.
Verdict: Not SphstRDnck.
Profits rule. People lose. This ain’t health care — it’s hostage care.